High-Level Adaptation and Aftereffects

Aftereffects generally occur after a prolonged exposure (adaptation) to a first stimulus possessing one given property followed by presentation of a stimulus bearing a neutral value of that property. The aftereffect consists in a change in appearance of the neutral stimulus following the adapter, co...

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Superior document:Frontiers Research Topics
:
Year of Publication:2017
Language:English
Series:Frontiers Research Topics
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (98 p.)
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spelling Stefania D'Ascenzo auth
High-Level Adaptation and Aftereffects
Frontiers Media SA 2017
1 electronic resource (98 p.)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
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Frontiers Research Topics
Aftereffects generally occur after a prolonged exposure (adaptation) to a first stimulus possessing one given property followed by presentation of a stimulus bearing a neutral value of that property. The aftereffect consists in a change in appearance of the neutral stimulus following the adapter, compared to the appearance of the neutral stimulus when it is perceived without any previous exposure to the adapter. The transient phenomena of perceptual aftereffects are believed to depend on the activation of neuron populations that respond selectively to a given property of the stimuli. Studying how adaptation occurs (which stimulus properties are sensitive to it, which timings are necessary, whether individual differences modulate its occurrence) has thus become an indirect way to probe the plasticity of sensory functions in the nervous system, recently extending to more cognitive and representational aspects of neural coding. In the last two decades, indeed, it has been demonstrated that aftereffects occur not only for low-level properties of stimuli (such as motion, color, or orientation) but also for high-level properties. Many studies have proven that high-level proprieties of the stimuli, e.g. gender, identity, ethnicity, or age of a face or a voice, are sensitive to this phenomenon. It has been shown, for example, that the prolonged exposure to a female or male face produces a gender misperception in the opposite direction when an androgynous face is shown after the adapter. Furthermore, recent studies have also shown that aftereffects are not strictly contingent upon the physical features that make up stimuli, but they seem to run across the high-level proprieties subjects are adapted to. These evidences are supported by cross-category adaptation studies, which underlie how aftereffects occur even across stimuli that do not share physical features (e.g. bodies and faces) but that instead, share common higher-level properties, such as gender. Given the growing body of research focused on adaptation and aftereffects in high-level perception at the boundaries with perceptual learning, attention and cognition, the purpose of this topic is to provide a picture of the state of the art relative to the specific phenomena of adaptation in high-level perceptual processing.
English
Aftereffects
emotion
bodies
adaptation
Perception
faces
High-level
2-88945-147-X
Luca Tommasi auth
Rocco Palumbo auth
language English
format eBook
author Stefania D'Ascenzo
spellingShingle Stefania D'Ascenzo
High-Level Adaptation and Aftereffects
Frontiers Research Topics
author_facet Stefania D'Ascenzo
Luca Tommasi
Rocco Palumbo
author_variant s d sd
author2 Luca Tommasi
Rocco Palumbo
author2_variant l t lt
r p rp
author_sort Stefania D'Ascenzo
title High-Level Adaptation and Aftereffects
title_full High-Level Adaptation and Aftereffects
title_fullStr High-Level Adaptation and Aftereffects
title_full_unstemmed High-Level Adaptation and Aftereffects
title_auth High-Level Adaptation and Aftereffects
title_new High-Level Adaptation and Aftereffects
title_sort high-level adaptation and aftereffects
series Frontiers Research Topics
series2 Frontiers Research Topics
publisher Frontiers Media SA
publishDate 2017
physical 1 electronic resource (98 p.)
isbn 2-88945-147-X
illustrated Not Illustrated
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